Icosagon


In geometry, an icosagon or 20-gon is a twenty-sided polygon. The sum of any icosagon's interior angles is 3240 degrees.

Regular icosagon

The regular icosagon has Schläfli symbol, and can also be constructed as a truncated decagon, t, or a twice-truncated pentagon, tt.
One interior angle in a regular icosagon is 162°, meaning that one exterior angle would be 18°.
The area of a regular icosagon with edge length t is
In terms of the radius R of its circumcircle, the area is
since the area of the circle is the regular icosagon fills approximately 98.36% of its circumcircle.

Uses

The Big Wheel on the popular US game show The Price Is Right has an icosagonal cross-section.
The Globe, the outdoor theater used by William Shakespeare's acting company, was discovered to have been built on an icosagonal foundation when a partial excavation was done in 1989.
As a golygonal path, the swastika is considered to be an irregular icosagon.
A regular square, pentagon, and icosagon can completely fill a plane vertex.

Construction

As 20 = 22 × 5, regular icosagon is constructible using a compass and straightedge, or by an edge-bisection of a regular decagon, or a twice-bisected regular pentagon:

Construction of a regular icosagon

Construction of a regular decagon

The golden ratio in icosagon

Symmetry

The regular icosagon has Dih20 symmetry, order 40. There are 5 subgroup dihedral symmetries:, and, and 6 cyclic group symmetries:, and.
These 10 symmetries can be seen in 16 distinct symmetries on the icosagon, a larger number because the lines of reflections can either pass through vertices or edges. John Conway labels these by a letter and group order. Full symmetry of the regular form is r40 and no symmetry is labeled a1. The dihedral symmetries are divided depending on whether they pass through vertices or edges, and i when reflection lines path through both edges and vertices. Cyclic symmetries in the middle column are labeled as g for their central gyration orders.
Each subgroup symmetry allows one or more degrees of freedom for irregular forms. Only the g20 subgroup has no degrees of freedom but can seen as directed edges.
The highest symmetry irregular icosagons are d20, an isogonal icosagon constructed by ten mirrors which can alternate long and short edges, and p20, an isotoxal icosagon, constructed with equal edge lengths, but vertices alternating two different internal angles. These two forms are duals of each other and have half the symmetry order of the regular icosagon.

Dissection

states that every zonogon can be dissected into m/2 parallelograms.
In particular this is true for regular polygons with evenly many sides, in which case the parallelograms are all rhombi. For the icosagon, m=10, and it can be divided into 45: 5 squares and 4 sets of 10 rhombs. This decomposition is based on a Petrie polygon projection of a 10-cube, with 45 of 11520 faces. The list enumerates the number of solutions as 18,410,581,880, including up to 20-fold rotations and chiral forms in reflection.

10-cube

Related polygons

An icosagram is a 20-sided star polygon, represented by symbol. There are three regular forms given by Schläfli symbols:,, and. There are also five regular star figures using the same vertex arrangement: 2, 4, 5, 2, 4, and 10.
Deeper truncations of the regular decagon and decagram can produce isogonal intermediate icosagram forms with equally spaced vertices and two edge lengths.
A regular icosagram,, can be seen as a quasitruncated decagon, t=. Similarly a decagram, has a quasitruncation t=, and finally a simple truncation of a decagram gives t=.

Petrie polygons

The regular icosagon is the Petrie polygon for a number of higher-dimensional polytopes, shown in orthogonal projections in Coxeter planes:
It is also the Petrie polygon for the icosahedral 120-cell, small stellated 120-cell, great icosahedral 120-cell, and great grand 120-cell.